I have discovered a problem with the PMAGs. A friend shoots carbine matches. He uses PMAGs for these matches and for duty carry. at a recent match he experienced a nasty type 3 stoppage that was traced to the magazine. The mag had been loaded via stripper clips with M-193 Ball. On the 2nd to the last round, FTF. As the picture shows the last round (first round into the mag, with its nose on the wrong side of the center rib. This caused the top round to be out of alignment enough to cause the FTF.

When loading from a stripper clip the noses get pushed around at random angles. The first round in the mag obviously started on one side of the center rib but the follower pushed the body to the other side. The center rib prevented the round from correcting its self in the mag body. A GI mag does not have this center rib so the rounds will be corrected by the follower.

The lesson is (IMHO) do not load PMAGs with stripper clips, Using a LULA or loading one round at a time should not cause this problem.

__________________
In life, strive to take the high road....It offers a better field of fire.
"Robo is right" Fuzzball

I have a good number of the PMAGS. My first attempt at loading with the stripper clips seemed very awkward as the stripper clip guide just did not fit cleanly and securely on the magazines. Fortunately, I also have a LULA and I use it exclusively when loading the PMAGS.

Robocop... can I ask you a dumb question, not directly related to your post?

When looking at the .223 rounds in that magazine, it appears that they have some superfucial contamination (rust?) and some dents and scratches. It may just be the photo, but it sure looks like you've got some wear and tear on that ammo...

What is the condition is the ammunition and what kind of handling/storage caused this condition?

Robocop... can I ask you a dumb question, not directly related to your post?

When looking at the .223 rounds in that magazine, it appears that they have some superfucial contamination (rust?) and some dents and scratches. It may just be the photo, but it sure looks like you've got some wear and tear on that ammo...

What is the condition is the ammunition and what kind of handling/storage caused this condition?

--Bama

I would suggest that he loads his own, but then I looked at the pic again and if I had brass that nasty it would go in the scrap pile.

Robocop... can I ask you a dumb question, not directly related to your post?

When looking at the .223 rounds in that magazine, it appears that they have some superfucial contamination (rust?) and some dents and scratches. It may just be the photo, but it sure looks like you've got some wear and tear on that ammo...

What is the condition is the ammunition and what kind of handling/storage caused this condition?

--Bama

The top round has a slight tarnished/discolored spot near the mouth. This is a normal storage/handling blemish and does not effect the performance. The dents/gouges are from the bolt riding against that round when the upward pressure became insufficient to put the round in line to feed. Even nasty looking dings like these were ironed out when fired. These would not cause major problems.

This is new M-193 ball ammo.

__________________
In life, strive to take the high road....It offers a better field of fire.
"Robo is right" Fuzzball